CHEYENNE, Indigenous People of North America

shīănˈ, –ĕnˈ, indigenous people of North America whose language belongs to the Algonquian branch of the Algonquian-Wakashan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). The Cheyenne abandoned their settlements in Minnesota in the 17th cent., leaving the region to the hostile Sioux and Ojibwa. Gradually migrating W along the Cheyenne River and then south, they established earth-lodge villages and raised crops. After the introduction of the horse (c.1760) they eventually became nomadic buffalo hunters. The tribe split (c.1830) when a large group decided to settle on the upper Arkansas River and take advantage of the trade facilities offered by Bent's Fort. This group became known as the Southern Cheyenne. The Northern Cheyenne continued to live about the headwaters of the Platte River. For the next few years the Southern Cheyenne, allied with the Arapaho, were engaged in constant warfare against the Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache. Peace was made c.1840, and the five tribes became allies.

The Cheyenne were generally friendly toward white settlers until the discovery of gold in Colorado (1858) brought a swarm of gold seekers into their lands. By a treaty signed in 1861 the Cheyenne agreed to live on a reservation in SE Colorado, but the U.S. government did not fulfill its obligations, and they were reduced to near starvation. Cheyenne raids resulted in punitive expeditions by the U.S. army. The indiscriminate massacre (1864) of warriors, women, and children at Sand Creek, Colo., was an unprovoked assault on a friendly group. The incident aroused the Cheyenne to fury, and a bitter war followed. Gen. George Custer destroyed (1868) Black Kettle's camp on the Washita River, and fighting between the whites and the Southern Cheyenne ended, except for an outbreak in 1874–75. The Northern Cheyenne joined with the Sioux and overwhelmed Custer and his 7th Cavalry at the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876. They finally surrendered in 1877 and were moved south and confined with the Southern Cheyenne in what is now Oklahoma. Plagued by disease and malnutrition, they made two desperate attempts to escape and return to the north. A separate reservation was eventually established for them in Montana. There were almost 12,000 Cheyenne in the United States in 1990.

Bibliography

See G. B. Grinnell, The Fighting Cheyennes (1915, repr. 1956) and The Cheyenne Indians (2 vol., 1923, repr. 1972); E. A. Hoebel, The Cheyennes (1960); D. J. Berthrong, The Southern Cheyennes (1963); J. Millard, The Cheyenne Wars (1964); John Stands in Timber and M. Liberty, Cheyenne Memories (1967); P. J. Powell, Sweet Medicine (2 vol., 1969); J. H. Moore, The Cheyenne Nation (1987).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Cheyenne Indigenous People of North America  - 1042 results

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...its ongoing relations with the indigenous inhabitants. What I learned both...by our origins, by our history of mistreatment of Indians, and by...As for the Algonquian-speaking peoples of North America, in the mid-nineties my desire...
...Ironically, some genera that evolved indigenously in North America, such as horse and camel, which...favored route for the immigration of that most predatory of mammals...primeval flora and fauna that people encountered when they reached...
...the Indianness of many peoples of mixed Indian-African...by Blacks to assert an indigenous stance). In the end...Lumbee Indian and African American Church Music. Her careful...firsthand knowledge of North Carolinas Lumbee and...
...Special issue, Native Peoples and Tourism, Ethnohistory...the Anthropology of North American Indians. Thomas...on the Northern Cheyenne Reser- vation...Ethnographic Research on North American Indigenous Peoples. Annual Review of Anthropology ?:2...
...Prah Kwesi Kwaa 1997 "North/South Parallels and Intersections." Critique of Anthropology 17 4...ed., Diagnosing America: Anthropology and Public...1982 Europe and the People without History . Berkeley...Karen Saenz The Hopi, indigenous people of the U.S. Southwest...
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journal articles on: Cheyenne Indigenous People of North America  - 71 results

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...were punished by the people, the gods would not...historical interpretation of "chief" with some arguing...characteristic of most indigenous cultures especially...confederations and nations in North America such as the Iroquois, Cheyenne, and Laguna had flexible...
...pre-reservation native North America. 2 Unfortunately...epidemiology of Indian people during the...Northern Cheyennes as an ethnohistorical...20 The indigenous healthcare...the Native Peoples of North America. Yearbook...Perspective on Cheyenne Demography...
...pictographs, used by Indigenous people in northern and Plains areas of North America. These were first inscribed...Native-created textual sources sustain Indigenous sovereignty. As my students...alternative literacy. I choose Cheyenne texts and images for personal...
...its a puzzle--a puzzle about people. Respondent 2 NOTES Points of view expressed herein are those...sincere. appreciation to the American Indians who participated in...Self-Destructive Behavior on the Cheyenne River Reservation". In Suicide...
...Prison to Homeland: The Cheyenne River Indian Reservation...The Plains Indians of the Twentieth Century...Indian history in "Native Americans, New Voices: American...Became Cowboys: Native Peoples and Cattle Ranching in...all in Handbook of North American Indians , Vol...
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magazine articles on: Cheyenne Indigenous People of North America  - 14 results

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...First Nations people, or the indigenous people of this country, are an exceptionally...that seems to appear identifiably American Indian, generally the first question...were Lakota, were Blackfeet or Cheyenne ... and then were Indian." D...
...of similar topography and climate in North America the impact of the lame came later but was similar...the Great Plains were full of native people on horseback: the Blackfoot, Arapaho, Cheyenne, Crow, Sioux, Comanche. The Indians of...
...of miles up and down the rivers of North America, potent religious symbols and rituals...The best known is the Ghost Dance of the 1890s, sparked by the Nevada...been commissioned to counsel Indian people to accommodate to the demands of...
...Southern Cheyenne. Hes also director of the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI...than 1,000 indigenous tribes of North and South...how many peoples will be represented...language of the Southern Cheyenne it is Tsis-tsis-tsas...terms, Native American and American...that most people indigenous to this hemisphere...
...is linking indigenous peoples throughout North America and Hawaii in the fight...herself is a member of the Anishinaabeg nation...former boundaries of indigenous lands, the location...beneficiaries. On Northern Cheyenne lands, coal was strip-mined...
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newspaper articles on: Cheyenne Indigenous People of North America  - 1 result

 
 
...communities in North, South and Central America, will perform...programs of Indian blues...Seminole), and Indigenous (Nakota...Southern Cheyenne heritage...for native peoples, not just...National Museum of the American Indian amp...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Cheyenne Indigenous People of North America  - 4 results

 
 
CHEYENNE , indigenous people of North America shian , en , indigenous people of North America whose language...languages ). The Cheyenne abandoned...the Battle of the Little...Southern Cheyenne in what is...return to the north. A separate...
...encountered infrequently in indigenous American tongues. In the Algonquian...cases like those of Latin occur in some...Languages of North America The most...by about 130,000 people in Canada and a few...Arapaho, Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Cree, Delaware...
...indigenous peoples of North America. Early...removing the indigenous population...and the Cheyenne . Other tribes...the Plains people had been...the advance of white settlers...the Native Americans depended...army and indigenous tribes reached...
...attempted settlement by the English in North America. See Roanoke Island . Fort Scott...HS NW Ark. 1961 75 (30) One of the first U.S. military posts in...Prehistoric burial mounds of Hopewell people. Hopewell Furnace HS SE Pa...


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